update email formatting post draft
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@ -1,10 +1,12 @@
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---
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title: Email Formatting Is Harder Than It Looks
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date: 2025-07-13
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date: 2025-07-14
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draft: true
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---
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*[UTF-8]: Unicode Transformation Format - 8 bit.
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*[UTF-8]: Unicode Transformation Format – 8 bit. Text encoding standard.
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*[plain–text]: Content representing only readable characters, and whitespace characters that affect the arrangement of the text.
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[Kakoune]: https://kakoune.org
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@ -12,10 +14,12 @@ draft: true
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[TOC]
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## Plain text email
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As I've [mentioned before](./email-in-kakoune.md), I like using [Kakoune] for
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reading & writing emails. Of course, Kakoune is a text editor, not a _rich text_
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editor. It operates on UTF-8 _plain text_ --- which means that the emails I
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write need to be in plain text, too.
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reading & writing emails. Of course, Kakoune a source code editor, not a _rich
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text_ editor. It operates on UTF-8 _plain–text_ --- which means that the emails
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I write need to be in plain text, too.
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As it turns out, plain-text email (which predates HTML by decades[^html]) hasn't
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really left a "legacy" so much as it _hasn't actually gone anywhere_. Many
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@ -26,72 +30,151 @@ developers swear by it; some are even so committed as to automatically filter
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[mailing list etiquette](https://man.sr.ht/lists.sr.ht/etiquette.md) guide.
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As I went down `text/plain` path, I quickly learned that I needed an **email
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formatter**. Plain text is like source code. You can't rely on the recipient's
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mail client to render it in a certain way --- most often, what you see is
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_exactly_ what they get.
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formatter**. Why? Plain text is like source code. You can't rely on the
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recipient's mail client to render it in a certain way --- you have to assume
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that what you see is _exactly_ what _they_ get.
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I eventually wrote [`mailfmt`](https://git.ficd.sh/ficd/mailfmt) to fill this
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niche. It provides consistent paragraph spacing, hard-wrapping and paragraph
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reflow, while preserving Markdown syntax, email headers, quotes, sign-offs, and
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signature blocks. Additionally, the wrapped output can be made safe for passing
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to a Markdown parser. This is useful if you want to build an HTML email from
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plain-text.
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On one hand, this isn't really a problem --- the whole point of plain text is
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_not_ having to bother with formatting, right? There is, however, a crucial
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catch: **line wrapping**.
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## The wrapping problem
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Since we (humanity) have been _writing_ text, we've been _wrapping_ it. Pages,
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after all, have finite width. At some point, an ongoing sentence needs to
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continue on the line below it. This is called _wrapping_. In digital text, there
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are two kinds of wrapping: **soft** and **hard**. The former is much more
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common, and we often take it for granted.
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**Hard-wrapped text** is the simplest: the line breaks are directly part of the
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source. If you're writing a sentence that's getting too long, you simply press
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`<ret>` to begin a new line. The author is responsible for all line breaks. This
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guarantees that, (assuming the renderer doesn't reflow text), the output will
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always look _exactly_ how it does in the editor.
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**Soft-wrapped text** has line breaks inserted by the _renderer_ --- they're
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_not_ present in the source file. It's incredibly convenient! As the writer, we
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don't need to worry at all about line breaks; only paragraph breaks. We can
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trust that the text _will_ be wrapped properly whenever it's viewed.
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Now... remember how I just said that, in the context of plain text email, we
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can't make _any_ assumptions about how the text will be rendered? This applies
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to wrapping, too. _Some_ mail clients may wrap text, **but not all of them**.
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This essentially consigns us to hard-wrapping our emails.
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The problem? _It's inconvenient!_ Imagine you edit a paragraph, and remove a
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sentence. Well, now that entire paragraph's spacing is messed up, and you need
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to manually reflow it and fix the line breaks. Yuck!
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## The Markdown complication
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### Standard tools
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At this point, some of you may be screaming: _"but what about `fmt` and
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`fold`?"_ There exist utilities meant to solve this specific problem, included
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in most Linux distributions out-of-the-box! Well, you would be right. _Sort of_.
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It's true that we already have excellent, composable commands for wrapping and
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paragraph formatting. A simple `#!fish cat email.txt | fmt >email.txt` is enough
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to cover many cases. However, there's a problem: **these tools are markup
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agnostic**.
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Why is that a problem when I literally [just](#plain-text-email) said we don't
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care about markup? Well, there are _some_ markup formats that are delightfully
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readable even in plain--text. Consider the following _unordered list_ in HTML
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(Hyper Text **Markup** Format):
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```html
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<ul>
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<li>Foobar</li>
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<li>Barfoo</li>
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</ul>
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```
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See, machines can read this no problem... but people? We struggle. Now, consider
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the exact same expressed in [Markdown](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown):
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```markdown
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- Foobar
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- Barfoo
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```
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Isn't that so much nicer? As it turns out, markup isn't only meant to make
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writing HTML easier --- it's also a great way to enhance the _semantics_ of
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plain text.
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**This** is where we run up against issues with `fmt` & company: because they're
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not _aware_ of Markdown syntax, they have a tendency to **break** it. Consider
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the unordered list example from before:
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```console
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$ cat list.md | fmt
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- Foobar - Barfoo
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```
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The tool has _no idea_ this is meant to be a list. It just treats whitespace
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separated tokens as words and reflows paragraphs accordingly.
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### Markdown formatters
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My immediate next thought was to try an actual Markdown formatter. Not only do
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they _also_ handle wrapping & reflow, they won't break the markup. I gave it a
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shot, and to my horror, I found that they have the _opposite_ problem: they
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preserve markup, but they break [signature blocks](#signature-blocks),
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[sign-offs](#sign-offs), and [headers](#headers)!
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## Writing `mailfmt`
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I eventually wrote [`mailfmt`](https://git.ficd.sh/ficd/mailfmt) to fill the
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niche of email formatting. It provides consistent paragraph spacing,
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hard-wrapping and paragraph reflow, while preserving Markdown syntax, email
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headers, quotes, sign-offs, and signature blocks. Additionally, the wrapped
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output can be made safe for passing to a Markdown parser. This is useful if you
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want to build an HTML email from plain-text.
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`mailfmt` open-source under the ISC license, and is available on
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[PyPI](https://pypi.org/project/mailfmt/) for installation with tools like
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`pipx` and `uv`. The source code is available on sourcehut at
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[git.ficd.sh/ficd/mailfmt](https://git.ficd.sh/ficd/mailfmt).
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## Target Audience
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I wrote this tool primarily for myself. It's served me very well over the past
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few months. `mailfmt` could be helpful for anyone that prefers writing email in
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plain-text using text editors like Kakoune, Helix, and Vim. It can format via
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`stdin`/`stdout` and read/write files, making `mailfmt` easy to configure as a
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formatter for the `mail` filetype in your editor.
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I'm including a very lengthy explanation of exactly why I built this tool. You
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may think it's overkill for such a small program — but I like to be crystal
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clear about justifying my work. It reads like blog post rather than the
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emoji-filled `README`/marketing style we're accustomed to seeing on this
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platform. I've put a lot of thought into this, and I want to share my work. I
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hope you enjoy reading about my thought process.
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## Why I Built It (Comparison)
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Unsurprisingly, it all started with a specific problem I was having composing
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emails in plain-text format in my preferred text editor. As I searched for a
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solution, I couldn't find anything that met all my needs, so I wrote it myself.
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Here's what I wanted:
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### My requirements
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- A way to consistently format my outgoing emails in my text editor.
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- Paragraph reflow and automatic line wrapping.
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- Not all plain-text clients are capable of line-wrap. In some contexts, such
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as mailing lists, the author is expected to wrap the text themselves.
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- Inline Markdown syntax `can _still_ look great, **even** in plain-text!` Thus,
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I wanted to use it:
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- Ability to use Markdown syntax:
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- Without it being broken by reflow & wrap.
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- While looking good and retaining the same semantics in _both_ rendered
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**and** plain-text form — ideal for `multipart` emails.
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- Ensure signature block is formatted properly.
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- The single space after `--` and before the newline **must** be included.
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- _Ensure_ proper formatting of [signature blocks](#signature-blocks).
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- _Preserve_ formatting of [sign-offs](#sign-offs).
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### `fmt` and Markdown Formatters Don't Work For Email
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### Wrap & reflow
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The `fmt` utility provides great wrapping and reflow capabilities — I use it all
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the time while writing LaTeX. However, it's syntax agnostic, and breaks
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Markdown. For example, it completely mangles fenced code blocks. I figured: hey,
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why not just use a Markdown formatter? It supports Markdown (obviously), _and_
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can reflow & wrap text! Here's the problem: it turns out treating your
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**entire** email as a Markdown document isn't ideal.
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It turns out that the most important part was also the easiest to implement.
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Python's standard library includes
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[`textwrap`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/textwrap.html), which _literally_
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just does it for you. So the _real_ challenge becomes figuring out _what to
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wrap_, versus **what to ignore**.
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### Preserving Markdown
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Getting my tool to preseve Markdown was fairly straightforward. I'm not building
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a _Markdown formatter_, I'm building _a formatter that doesn't break Markdown_.
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In other words, I don't need to _parse_ Markdown syntax; just recognize it,
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**and ignore it**.
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`mailfmt`'s approach is simple: detect when a line matches a known pattern of
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Markdown block element syntax, such as leading `#` for headings, `-` for lists,
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etc. If so, **leave the line untouched**. Similarly, **don't format anything
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inside fenced code blocks**.
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#### Sign-Offs
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### Sign-offs
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Consider the following sign-off:
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Daniel
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```
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> However, this empty line looks _awkward_ when viewed in plain-text.
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> However, this empty line looks a tad awkward when viewed in plain--text.
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2. Put a backslash after the intentional line break:
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> Again, this looks bad when the Markdown isn't rendered.
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3. Put two spaces after the intentional line break (• = space):
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3. Put two spaces after the intentional line break (`•` = space):
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```
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Best•wishes,••
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don't reflow or wrap them. The heuristic matches a very simple pattern:
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```
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A courteous greeting,
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A courteous salutation,
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First Middle Last Name
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```
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#### Signature Block
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### Signature blocks
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The convention for signature blocks is as follows:
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The [standard](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signature_block#Standard_delimiter)
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for signature blocks is as follows:
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1. Begins with two `-` characters followed by a single space, then a newline.
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2. Everything that follows until the EOF is part of the signature.
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*[EOF]: End of file.
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Here's an example (note the • = space):
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```
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email@website.com
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```
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As with sign-offs, such a signature block gets mangled by Markdown formatters.
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As with sign-offs, such a signature block gets mangled by other formatters.
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Furthermore, the single space after the `--` token is important: if it's
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missing, some clients won't recognize it is a valid signature — our formatter
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should address this too.
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missing, some clients won't recognize it is a valid signature.
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`mailfmt` detects when a line's _only_ content is `--`. It adds the required
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trailing space if it's missing, and it treats the rest of the input as part of
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trailing space if it's missing, and it treats the rest of the file as part of
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the signature, leaving it completely untouched.
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### Consistent Multipart Emails
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## Headers
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Something you may want to do is generate a `multipart` email. This means that
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_both_ an HTML **and** plain-text representation of the _same_ email are
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Raw emails contain many
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[headers](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email#Message_header). Even if you're
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reading/writing in plain--text, it's likely that your client strips these.
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However, in some cases, you may want to insert a header or two manually.
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Luckily, headers are easily matched by
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[regex](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression), so `mailfmt` can
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ignore them without any issues.
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## Consistent multipart emails
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Something you may want to do is generate a `text/multipart` email. This means
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that _both_ an HTML **and** plain-text representation of the _same_ email are
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included in the file — leaving it up to the reader's client to pick which one to
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display.
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The plain-text email **must** be able to stand on its own, and _also_ render to
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decent-looking HTML. Essentially, you want to write your email in plain-text
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once, ensuring it has proper formatting, and then use a command to generate an
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HTML email from it. For this, `mailfmt` provides the `--markdown-safe` flag,
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which appends backslashes to the formatted output, making it safe for Markdown
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parsing without messing up the line breaks after sign-offs and signature blocks.
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The plain-text email **must** be able to stand on its own, and should _also_
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render to decent-looking HTML. Essentially, you want to write your email in
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plain-text once, ensuring it has proper formatting, and then use a command to
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generate an HTML email from it.
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For example, I use the following in [aerc](https://aerc-mail.org/) to generate
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an HTML multipart email whenever I want:
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For this, `mailfmt` provides the `--markdown-safe` flag, which appends
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backslashes to the formatted output, making it safe for Markdown parsing without
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messing up the line breaks after sign-offs and signature blocks.
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Note that the **only** thing this does is output Markdown with hard line breaks.
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It's the user's responsibility to write the pipeline for generating the email
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file. For example, I use the following in [aerc](https://aerc-mail.org/) to
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generate an HTML multipart email whenever I want:
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```ini
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[multipart-converters]
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## Conclusion
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If you've made it this far, thanks for sticking with me and reading to the end!
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Even if you don't plan to write plain-text email or use `mailfmt` at all, I hope
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you learned something interesting.
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Even if you don't plan to write plain--text email or use `mailfmt` at all, I
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hope you learned something interesting.
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